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      Immigrant Selectivity Effects on Health, Labor Market, and Educational Outcomes

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      Annual Review of Sociology
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Over the past two decades, a growing body of research has focused on immigrant selectivity and its effects on immigrant health, immigrant labor market outcomes, and children of immigrants’ educational outcomes. This review provides a theoretical overview of immigrant selectivity and its effects, and critically examines research on the effects of immigrant selectivity. Existing research suggests that positive immigrant selectivity helps explain paradoxical patterns of success among immigrants and their children in health, the labor market, and education. However, future research is needed that uses more rigorous research designs and measures, links immigrant selectivity and outcomes across domains, identifies the mechanisms through which immigrant selectivity matters, and considers different types of immigrant selectivity. I conclude by highlighting promising new studies along these lines and argue that immigrant selectivity is a central part of the process through which immigration contributes to inequality.

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          Most cited references76

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          The Second Generation in Western Europe: Education, Unemployment, and Occupational Attainment

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            Paradox lost: explaining the Hispanic adult mortality advantage.

            We tested three competing hypotheses regarding the adult "Hispanic mortality paradox": data artifact, migration, and cultural or social buffering effects. On the basis of a series of parametric hazard models estimated on nine years of mortality follow-up data, our results suggest that the "Hispanic" mortality advantage is a feature found only among foreign-born Mexicans and foreign-born Hispanics other than Cubans or Puerto Ricans. Our analysis suggests that the foreign-born Mexican advantage can be attributed to return migration, or the "salmon-bias" effect. However, we were unable to account for the mortality advantage observed among other foreign-born Hispanics.
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              International Migration, Self‐Selection, and the Distribution of Wages: Evidence from Mexico and the United States

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annual Review of Sociology
                Annu. Rev. Sociol.
                Annual Reviews
                0360-0572
                1545-2115
                July 30 2020
                July 30 2020
                : 46
                : 1
                : 315-334
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Sociology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA;
                Article
                10.1146/annurev-soc-121919-054639
                7733bef6-9674-4ed2-b778-927c8abb25d0
                © 2020
                History

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